Garden at the Cloisters in New York, Oct. 2002
Garden and Cross in the Trie Cloister at the Clois…
Judith as the "Devil Duck" Mummer at the Huntingto…
Targai Fencing at the Medieval Festival at the Hun…
Marian Fencing at the Fort Tryon Park Medieval Fes…
Sancha as a Devil Mummer at the Fort Tryon Park Me…
Sancha as a Devil Mummer at the Fort Tryon Park Me…
Wench and "Captain" Jack Sparrow at the Fort Tryon…
Judith as a Fox Mummer at the Fort Tryon Park Medi…
Table & Ostgardr Banner at the Fort Tryon Park Med…
Puppy Fighting at the Fort Tryon Park Medieval Fes…
Puppy & Kazimir Fighting at the Fort Tryon Park Me…
Puppy Fighting Aaron and Mael Eoin at the Fort Try…
Puppy Fighting Aaron and Mael Eoin at the Fort Try…
Kazimir at the Fort Tryon Park Medieval Festival,…
Sancha as a "Devil" Mummer at the Fort Tryon Park…
Sancha as a "Devil" Mummer at the Fort Tryon Park…
Sancha as a "Devil" Mummer at the Fort Tryon Park…
Sancha as a "Devil" Mummer at the Fort Tryon Park…
Sancha as a "Devil" Mummer Squabbling with Judith…
Sancha as a "Devil" Mummer & Thomas at the Fort Tr…
Sancha as a "Devil" Mummer & Thomas at the Fort Tr…
Dancing Mummers at the Fort Tryon Park Medieval Fe…
Dancing Mummers at the Fort Tryon Park Medieval Fe…
Dancing Mummers at the Fort Tryon Park Medieval Fe…
Llewellyn at the Fort Tryon Park Medieval Festival…
Festival gang
Anya & Lena
Appreciating a tatoo
Temporary tatoos
"Our" musicians
crew
Oz, Steve, and friend
Sunset Over the George Washington Bridge, Oct. 200…
Fighters at the Fort Tryon Park Medieval Festival,…
Fighters at the Fort Tryon Park Medieval Festival,…
Fighters at the Fort Tryon Park Medieval Festival,…
Glastonbury tower
Dimka i Kerya
Gang
Lenka i Kirjuha
Flagwaving
Preparations...
Rope-slide
Lena & Anya with guitar
Now get out of that...
Stage in the forest
Campsite at forest festival
Traditional dress
Not the cheap seats
Food delivered
Dinner in the forest
It's mint! Honestly!
Ukraine...
...and Russia
...Belarus...
Engineers Day
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Battlement at the Cloisters in NY, Oct. 2002
The Cloisters—described by Germain Bazin, former director of the Musée du Louvre in Paris, as "the crowning achievement of American museology"—is the branch of the Metropolitan Museum devoted to the art and architecture of medieval Europe. Located on four acres overlooking the Hudson River in northern Manhattan's Fort Tryon Park, the building incorporates elements from five medieval French cloisters—quadrangles enclosed by a roofed or vaulted passageway, or arcade—and from other monastic sites in southern France. Three of the cloisters reconstructed at the branch museum feature gardens planted according to horticultural information found in medieval treatises and poetry, garden documents and herbals, and medieval works of art, such as tapestries, stained-glass windows, and column capitals. Approximately five thousand works of art from medieval Europe, dating from about A.D. 800 with particular emphasis on the twelfth through fifteenth century, are exhibited in this unique and sympathetic context.
The collection at The Cloisters is complemented by more than six thousand objects exhibited in several galleries on the first floor of the Museum's main building on Fifth Avenue. A single curatorial department oversees medieval holdings at both locations. The collection at the main building displays a somewhat broader geographical and temporal range, while the focus at The Cloisters is on the Romanesque and Gothic periods. Renowned for its architectural sculpture, The Cloisters also rewards visitors with exquisite illuminated manuscripts, stained glass, metalwork, enamels, ivories, and tapestries.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/works_of_art/introduction.asp?dep=7
The collection at The Cloisters is complemented by more than six thousand objects exhibited in several galleries on the first floor of the Museum's main building on Fifth Avenue. A single curatorial department oversees medieval holdings at both locations. The collection at the main building displays a somewhat broader geographical and temporal range, while the focus at The Cloisters is on the Romanesque and Gothic periods. Renowned for its architectural sculpture, The Cloisters also rewards visitors with exquisite illuminated manuscripts, stained glass, metalwork, enamels, ivories, and tapestries.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/works_of_art/introduction.asp?dep=7
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